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Jun 11 2026EDUCATION

How small daily habits can impact your college grades

First-year university students who don’t get enough sleep or spend too much time on screens tend to earn lower grades by the end of the year. A study of 1, 447 Canadian undergraduates found that sleep quality matters more than many realize. Students who regularly sleep poorly, smoke daily, or clock

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Jun 10 2026SCIENCE

A First Human Test of Anti-Aging Shots is Underway

For the first time, a scientist team gave an anti-aging injection to a real person. The injection uses a technique called cellular reprogramming. It’s meant to make old cells act young again. Think of it like a software update for your body’s cells. Billionaires like Jeff Bezos and Sam Altman, alon

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Jun 10 2026FINANCE

SpaceX’s IPO: A Billion-Dollar Gamble or a Smart Bet?

SpaceX is about to make history by launching what could be the biggest initial public offering of the year, with a price tag of $1. 77 trillion—putting it in the same league as Apple and Microsoft. The hype around Elon Musk’s name alone has investors buzzing, but behind the numbers, there’s real ske

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Jun 10 2026BUSINESS

SpaceX’s Big Bet: Why Investors Are Betting Big on a Giant IPO

Investors aren’t just interested in SpaceX’s upcoming public offering—they’re lining up with orders worth over $250 billion, far outpacing the $75 billion the company hopes to raise. This massive demand, described as three to four times the planned offering size, suggests strong confidence in SpaceX

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Jun 09 2026OPINION

Should felons be allowed to lead a country?

The U. S. Constitution doesn’t stop a convicted felon from becoming president, even while in prison. When Donald Trump ran for office, voters knew about his 34 felony convictions. Now, as president again, he uses his power to build wealth, punish rivals, and escalate conflicts like the one with Iran

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Jun 09 2026HEALTH

Wearable gadgets for long-term health tracking: Do they really work for post-virus conditions?

Around 65 million people worldwide have dealt with long COVID, while another 17 to 24 million struggle with other lingering effects after infections. Doctors often suggest these patients keep an eye on their symptoms and adjust their activity levels carefully. Wearable devices like fitness trackers

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Jun 08 2026HEALTH

VRE in HIV Patients: What the Numbers Tell Us

The fight against vancomycin‑resistant enterococci, or VRE, is a global challenge that hits hardest where medical resources are thin. In Southwest Ethiopia, researchers focused on people living with HIV to see how often VRE shows up and what might push its spread. VRE lives in the gut for months,

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Jun 08 2026HEALTH

How embryo transfer methods affect growth in 12-year-olds

A study looked at kids born from frozen embryo transfers, fresh embryo transfers, and natural pregnancies to see if the way they were conceived affects their size at age 12. The research found that children from frozen embryo transfers tend to be slightly larger than those from fresh transfers or na

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Jun 07 2026BUSINESS

Companies That Outlived Nations

Several major businesses have stayed strong for over 200 years, even as the U. S. faced wars, depressions, and big economic shifts. Some started when George Washington was president. The Bank of New York began in 1784, while Cigna and State Street opened their doors in 1792. But one company beats th

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Jun 06 2026CRIME

AI Voice Scams: How a 5‑Second Clip Can Cost $635, 000

A new kind of scam has emerged that relies on a tiny audio clip to trick people into sending large sums of money. The trick works by copying the sound of a loved one from just five seconds of recorded speech. Once the voice is cloned, scammers can call or message victims pretending to be someone

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